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I don't think he'll pick at the newspaper. He likes to forage on the bottom of the cage though, so I'm unsure if the minimal contact his treats would have with it would be harmful?Ohh Man... I never looked at newspaper like THAT.
If you have birds that play with the newspaper I recommend using a cage with a grate at the bottom to separate the paper from the beak.
My big birds don't mess with the newspaper so is safe .
My Cockatiels will tend to shred and chew newspaper so the paper is separated from them by the floor of the cage or a separate grate.
Sadly, most people follow a last in, first out use process with near everything. The proper way is to follow first in, first out. Or, in plain English what is at the bottom of the pile is what is used first. With most people that means they would be using Newspapers, which are a couple to several months old.
For whatever reason, this Virus tends to become weaker as time passes. If I recall correct it is around a week for newspaper.
Magazines can be an issue. Never use Magazines that are printed with bright shiny surfaces... The ink and surface sealer can be dangerous to Parrots.
ok I guess I misinterpreted the OP.
I thought the idea was also to conserve the newspapers also (in case it needs to be used instead of toilet paper)
Each cage is different and what you can do is effected by your cage design.
The best cage design are those, which separate the Parrot from the paper by use of a floor grate. This assures that the Parrot is not eating or walking though its own poop.
If your cage has the separation, there is not contact with the newspaper and no concern.
It is important to remember that there are no reported cases of Birds being effected by this specific' Virus.
Each cage is different and what you can do is effected by your cage design.
The best cage design are those, which separate the Parrot from the paper by use of a floor grate. This assures that the Parrot is not eating or walking though its own poop.
If your cage has the separation, there is not contact with the newspaper and no concern.
It is important to remember that there are no reported cases of Birds being effected by this specific' Virus.
I put the paper towel on top of the grates so that his feet don't go through. He's in probably a slightly larger cage than is recommended. Will him eating off the paper be an issue?
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Hi everybody,
Just a quick question. Is newspaper and/or magazines safe to use for lining the bottom of the cage? Obviously right now I'm trying to conserve paper towel.
Thanks!
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paper towels (just the basic ones...not the ones with special scrubbers or added soap) are also really good as long as he/she doesn't go down there and shred the poopy material by pulling them up through the grate (my liked to try this). I know those are in short supply with covid-19, but something to consider. White packing paper from office depot (the kind in rolls) also works...as does banner paper (non coated).
If you have a way to clean up poop, you technically don't need a liner....it just makes cleaning easier...over years, a lack of liner could probably rust the cage, but I took away liners at least 2 years ago because my bird was messing with them too much....
If it comes down to it I will. But he really likes walking on the bottom of the cage and I can't imagine the bare grate is super comfortable lolI would get a bigger ball (if it falls through the grate w/o paper) and hide food elsewhere if I were you. I know that might annoy him, but he could still play with a ball if there were no paper on the grate....he's not that big...I can't imagine how small a ball would have to be to fall through a grate. You can hide food in paper handing from the falls of the cage (they sell skewers that work well, but you can also rig your own or just shove them into the bars firmly).
Worst-case-scenario, plain printer paper (non-glossy) could work and I bet you could order it on Amazon...people aren't after that sort of thing during Covid-19 (just towels etc lol)--but I don't think paper on grates is sanitary it can sometimes make birds hormonal (hence my suggestions).